fruitcake
See also: fruit-cake and fruit cake
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Compound of fruit + cake. First attested in c. 1687. Sense 2, predated by nutty as a fruitcake, was first attested in c. 1952.
Pronunciation
Noun
fruitcake (countable and uncountable, plural fruitcakes)
- A cake containing dried fruits and, optionally, nuts, citrus peel and spice.
- (colloquial, derogatory) A crazy or eccentric person. [from 1950s]
- 1952, Mickey Spillane, Kiss me Deadl, page 7:
- Easy, feller, easy. She's a fruitcake.
- 2006 April 4, Ros Taylor, quoting David Cameron, “Cameron refuses to apologise to Ukip”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
- "Ukip is sort of a bunch of … fruitcakes and loonies and closet racists mostly," Mr Cameron told LBC radio.
- (US, slang, colloquial, derogatory, dated) A homosexual male.
- Synonym: fruit
Derived terms
Translations
cake
|
crazy person
homosexual
|
See also
Further reading
- “fruitcake n.1”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present
- “fruitcake”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
Dutch
Etymology
Compound of fruit (“fruit”) + cake (“cake”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfrœy̯t.keːk/
- Hyphenation: fruit‧cake
Noun
fruitcake m (plural fruitcakes, diminutive fruitcakeje n)